Transnational Professional Activism and the Prevention of Nuclear War in Britain [0.03%]
跨国专业活动与英国的核战争预防
Christoph Laucht
Christoph Laucht
While anti-nuclear weapons activism in Britain and other nations has received considerable historiographical attention, its transnational professional dimensions have so far been neglected. This article thus introduces the concept of "trans...
Emaciated, Exhausted and Excited: The Bodies and Minds of the Irish in Nineteenth-Century Lancashire Asylums [0.03%]
皮包骨、疲惫却充满激情的身体与心灵:19世纪兰开夏郡难民营中的爱尔兰人
Catherine Cox,Hilary Marland,Sarah York
Catherine Cox
Drawing on asylum reception orders, casebooks and annual reports, as well as County Council notebooks recording the settlement of Irish patients, this article examines a deeply traumatic and enduring aspect of the Irish migration experience...
Kira L S Newman
Kira L S Newman
The outbreak of bubonic plague that struck London and Westminster in 1636 provoked the usual frenzied response to epidemics, including popular flight and government-mandated quarantine. The government asserted that plague control measures w...
Tourism and the Hispanicization of race in Jim Crow Miami, 1945-1965 [0.03%]
二十世纪四十年代至六十年代旅游业与吉姆克劳时代的迈阿密的“拉美化”及其种族问题
Chanelle N Rose
Chanelle N Rose
This article examines how Miami's significant presence of Anglo Caribbean blacks and Spanish-speaking tourists critically influenced the evolution of race relations before and after the watershed 1959 Cuban Revolution. The convergence of pe...
The "Quadroon-Plaçage" myth of antebellum New Orleans: Anglo-American (mis)interpretations of a French-Caribbean phenomenon [0.03%]
关于美国 ante-bellum 时期新奥尔良的“四分之一黑血混血女性共偶制”神话:对一种法属加勒比海现象的美利坚式误读
Kenneth Aslakson
Kenneth Aslakson
The intimate relationships between white men and women of color in antebellum New Orleans, commonly known by the term plaçage, are a large part of the romanticized lore of the city and its history. This article exposes the common understan...
"The law has no feeling for poor folks like us!" Everyday responses to legal compulsion in England's working-class communities, 1871-1904 [0.03%]
“法律不顾像我们这样的穷人!”——英格兰工人阶级社区对法律强制的日常反应(1871—1904)
Sascha Auerbach
Sascha Auerbach
During the late Victorian period, the role of the state increased dramatically in England's working-class urban communities. New laws on labor, health, and education, enforced by a growing bureaucracy of elected and appointed officials, ext...
Alice Rio
Alice Rio
Voluntary entry into unfreedom in late antiquity and the early middle ages has tended to be interpreted as anything but voluntary: instead, self-sales and autodeditions have been seen mostly in terms of coercion, whether by force or by nece...
Writing Indigenous women's lives in the Bay of Bengal: cultures of empire in the Andaman Islands, 1789-1906 [0.03%]
书写孟加拉湾安达曼群岛的土著妇女的生活(1789-1906):帝国文化下的生活
Clare Anderson
Clare Anderson
This article explores the lives of two Andamanese women, both of whom the British called “Tospy.” The first part of the article takes an indigenous and gendered perspective on early British colonization of the Andamans in the 1860s, and t...
The "other" side of labor reform: accounts of incarceration and resistance in the Straits Settlements penal system, 1825-1873 [0.03%]
“另一面”:海峡殖民地刑罚制度中的监禁与抵抗述评(1825—1873年)
Anoma Pieris
Anoma Pieris
The rhetoric surrounding the transportation of prisoners to the Straits Settlements and the reformative capacity of the penal labor regime assumed a uniform subject, an impoverished criminal, who could be disciplined and accordingly civiliz...